Forastiere Francesco, Stafoggia Massimo, Berti Giovanna, Bisanti Luigi, Cernigliaro Achille, Chiusolo Monica, Mallone Sandra, Miglio Rossella, Pandolfi Paolo, Rognoni Magda, Serinelli Maria, Tessari Roberta, Vigotti Mariangela, Perucci Carlo A
Department of Epidemiology, Rome E Health Authority, Rome, Italy.
Epidemiology. 2008 Jul;19(4):571-80. doi: 10.1097/EDE.0b013e3181761f8a.
Several time-series studies have established the relationship between particulate matter (PM10) and mortality. We adopted a case-crossover design to evaluate whether individual socio-demographic characteristics and chronic or acute medical conditions modify the PM10-mortality association.
We selected all natural deaths (321,024 subjects) occurring among adult (aged 35+ years) residents of 9 Italian cities between 1997 and 2004. We had access to individual information on socio-demographic variables, location of death, and chronic conditions (hospital admissions in the preceding 2-year period). For in-hospital deaths, we collected information on treatment wards at time of death and acute medical conditions. In a case-crossover analysis we adjusted for time, population changes, and meteorological conditions.
PM10 was associated with mortality among subjects age 65 years and older (0.75% increase per 10 microg/m3 [95% confidence interval = 0.42% to 1.09%]), with a more pronounced effect among people age 85 and older. A weaker effect was found among the most affluent people. The effect was present for both out-of-hospital and in-hospital deaths, especially among those treated in general medicine and other less specialized wards. PM10 effects were stronger among people with diabetes (1.03% [0.28% to 1.79%]) and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (0.84% [0.17% to 1.52%]). The acute conditions with the largest effect estimates were acute impairment of pulmonary circulation (4.56% [0.75% to 8.51%]) and heart failure (1.67% [0.30% to 3.04%]).
Several factors, including advanced age, type of hospital ward, and chronic and acute health conditions, modify the PM10-related risk of death. Altered pulmonary circulation and heart failure are important effect modifiers, suggesting that cardiac decompensation is a possible mechanism of the fatal PM10 effect.
多项时间序列研究已证实颗粒物(PM10)与死亡率之间的关系。我们采用病例交叉设计来评估个体的社会人口学特征以及慢性或急性疾病状况是否会改变PM10与死亡率之间的关联。
我们选取了1997年至2004年间意大利9个城市成年(35岁及以上)居民中发生的所有自然死亡病例(321,024名受试者)。我们获取了关于社会人口学变量、死亡地点以及慢性疾病(前两年内的住院情况)的个体信息。对于院内死亡病例,我们收集了死亡时的治疗病房信息以及急性疾病状况。在病例交叉分析中,我们对时间、人口变化和气象条件进行了校正。
PM10与65岁及以上人群的死亡率相关(每10微克/立方米增加0.75%[95%置信区间=0.42%至1.09%]),在85岁及以上人群中影响更为显著。在最富有的人中发现的影响较弱。这种影响在院外和院内死亡中均存在,尤其是在接受普通内科和其他不太专业病房治疗的人群中。PM10对糖尿病患者(1.03%[0.28%至1.79%])和慢性阻塞性肺疾病患者(0.84%[0.17%至1.52%])的影响更强。影响估计最大的急性疾病是肺循环急性损害(4.56%[0.75%至8.51%])和心力衰竭(1.67%[0.30%至3.04%])。
包括高龄、医院病房类型以及慢性和急性健康状况在内的多个因素会改变与PM10相关的死亡风险。肺循环改变和心力衰竭是重要的效应修饰因素,这表明心脏失代偿可能是PM10致命影响的一种机制。